08/25/2025
"TST's Protect Children Project provides a religious exemption to all students who believe in our Tenet III, the inviolability of one's own body.
If you carry our Student Rights Card with you in school and put them on notice of your beliefs, any attempt at corporal punishment, seclusion, restraint, or denial of bathroom access will be considered a religious/civil rights violation, thus leading to legal action from TST on your behalf.
Download your Student Rights Card or get in touch with us for help": protectchildrenproject.com
Article: tinyurl.com/DB-Brewer
In a recent interview on Fox News , former NFL player and current imbecile Jack Brewer argued that, "They took the paddle out of the school and everything collapsed...Corporal punishment is the only way," as an explanation for crime in urban areas.
Because Mr. Brewer was nominated by Trump to head the Congressional Commission for the Social Status of Black Men and Boys, his profoundly uninformed opinion unfortunately carries weight. This idea that kids need to be beaten in school to improve their behavior conflicts with factual evidence as well as common sense decency.
In an extensive analysis of research in 2023, the American Academy of Pediatrics determined that "Corporal punishment is not effective as a disciplinary method..." and "...is associated with a range of negative effects among children and adolescents, including a higher incidence of behavior and mental health problems, impaired cognitive development, poor educational outcomes, ...[and] increased aggression and perpetration of violence."
Brewer, who has often promoted bringing the "paddle and prayer" back into schools, should be an embarrassment to the Christian faith. But regardless of his despicable rhetoric around school discipline, TST's Protect Children Project provides a religious exemption to all students who believe in our Tenet III, the inviolability of one's own body.
If you carry our Student Rights Card with you in school and put them on notice of your beliefs, any attempt at corporal punishment, seclusion, restraint, or denial of bathroom access will be considered a religious/civil rights violation, thus leading to legal action from TST on your behalf.
Download your Student Rights Card or get in touch with us for help: protectchildrenproject.com
Article: tinyurl.com/DB-Brewer